Escape of the martian protoatmosphere and initial water inventory
N. V. Erkaev, H. Lammer, L. Elkins-Tanton, A. St\"okl, P. Odert, E., Marcq, E. A. Dorfi, K. G. Kislyakova, Yu. N. Kulikov, M. Leitzinger, M., G\"udel

TL;DR
This study models early Mars' atmosphere, estimating nebula capture and outgassing effects, and finds that Mars likely lost most of its initial protoatmosphere within a few million years due to solar XUV-driven escape.
Contribution
It provides a detailed quantitative analysis of Mars' early atmospheric evolution, combining nebular capture, outgassing, and atmospheric escape models, which was not comprehensively done before.
Findings
Mars likely lost its nebular hydrogen envelope within 0.1-7.5 Myr.
Outgassed volatiles could have been lost over 0.4-12 Myr.
Early Mars's atmosphere was significantly thinner due to solar XUV-driven escape.
Abstract
Latest research in planet formation indicate that Mars formed within a few million years (Myr) and remained a planetary embryo that never grew to a more massive planet. It can also be expected from dynamical models, that most of Mars' building blocks consisted of material that formed in orbital locations just beyond the ice line which could have contained ~0.1-0.2 wt. % of H2O. By using these constraints, we estimate the nebula-captured and catastrophically outgassed volatile contents during the solidification of Mars' magma ocean and apply a hydrodynamic upper atmosphere model for the study of the soft X-ray and extreme ultraviolet (XUV) driven thermal escape of the martian protoatmosphere during the early active epoch of the young Sun. The amount of gas that has been captured from the protoplanetary disk into the planetary atmosphere is calculated by solving the hydrostatic structure…
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